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How Hard Should You Workout To Build Muscle? (AVOID THIS MISTAKE!) 

Jeremy Ethier
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It’s commonly thought that the hardest worker in the gym working to failure is clearly going to get the most gains, right? If you have the ability to train to failure, then surely getting that extra rep or two every set (aka max effort training) is going to lead to more muscle growth and strength. But when it comes to how hard you should be training, it seems that training smarter instead of just training harder leads to better gains with less effort. But just how hard should you train? Well to answer this question, let’s start with the theory behind training to failure every set of your workout.
Working to failure is thought to be the best way to train for muscle growth for a few main reasons. First, failure training would lead to more growth given the maximal motor unit recruitment and mechanical tension it would experience. Second, similar to motor unit recruitment, muscle protein synthesis is lower when you don’t go to failure vs when you do. Lastly, given the positive relationship we see between workout volume and muscle growth, it would seem that pushing each set to failure would increase the overall workout volume you’re doing and lead to more growth.
But training to failure every set comes with a cost. Not only is it unenjoyable for most and requires a great deal of motivation to do every workout, but it’s also very fatiguing on the body. This delays recovery and your muscle damage can easily carry over into your next workouts for the week. When done over long periods, it eventually can lead to a state of “overtraining” which results in a reduction in your anabolic hormones and basically just creates an environment in your body that is detrimental to building muscle.
Now, let’s take a closer look at the theory behind training to failure. First, while motor unit recruitment and muscle activation does increase as you approach failure in a set, it seems to plateau around 3-5 reps shy from failure. Second, if you train close enough to failure, you are able to still maximize muscle protein synthesis but without much of the extra fatigue you get when you train to failure. Lastly, the muscular fatigue caused by going to failure in a set causes your performance to suffer in successive sets, leading to less volume overall.
So, when it comes to the question of how hard should you train, it seems that taking your sets just shy of failure is your best bet. However, it’s crucial that you get close enough to failure during your sets in order to still maximize growth, and that doesn’t mean that your training becomes “easy”, because that’s inferior for growth.
Unfortunately, most people underestimate the amount of reps they can actually do for max effort training and end up training too easy as a result. You can ensure that you’re actually pushing hard enough during your sets for an exercise, is to dedicate a day where you use a spotter and try to get as many reps as you can during each set. Add these reps together to get a total, then divide this number by the number of sets you did. This number then gives you a good indication of what you’ll want to aim for next time.
All in all, it’s clear that constantly pushing for that extra rep or two isn’t always a good thing, as it provides very little additional stimulation for the huge jump in fatigue that you get in return. So train hard, but if you want to see the best results in the long run, then you need to train smart as well. And for a step-by-step program that applies this and takes care of all the guesswork for you by showing you exactly how to optimally train AND eat week after week in order to build muscle as efficiently as possible with science, then simply take the analysis quiz below to discover which specific program is best for your body and where it’s currently at:
builtwithscience.com/bws-free...
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Filmed by: Bruno Martin Del Campo
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6 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 1,6 тыс.   
@JeremyEthier
@JeremyEthier 4 года назад
Are you guilty of training too hard or not training hard enough? Hope you enjoyed this one - comment below what other topics you’d like me to cover and I’ll get on it! Cheers!
@marcusmarana4283
@marcusmarana4283 4 года назад
Can you make a video of your home gym?
@SanatanMandirSamaj
@SanatanMandirSamaj 4 года назад
am training hard but gaining weight slowly any tips
@abhi6149
@abhi6149 4 года назад
Bro do u take protein powder for muscle growth ?
@AV-bp3bc
@AV-bp3bc 4 года назад
Thanks jeremy
@highlighthilltop5470
@highlighthilltop5470 4 года назад
Jeremy Ethier great video, one thing, you did not put links in the description to studies you used. Please put links in the description of the studies you used and remember to do so in the future. Other than that, great video!
@finickyaman3412
@finickyaman3412 3 года назад
Parents : we want our child to succeed and get a good life Me : *watches video on training to failure*
@Kevin-cy2dr
@Kevin-cy2dr 2 года назад
Failure is a part of success.
@oldelectronicdancemusic
@oldelectronicdancemusic 2 года назад
Hahaha! That's funny.
@spoopyscaryskelebones3846
@spoopyscaryskelebones3846 2 года назад
Good one düd
@motionboxstudios4055
@motionboxstudios4055 2 года назад
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@kenyalmb
@kenyalmb Год назад
@@spoopyscaryskelebones3846 kid
@emresermutlu
@emresermutlu 4 года назад
Man, you really 1) Know the subject well 2) Explain the subject well 3) Care about us, rather than trying to impress us. Rare combination of expertise and wisdom at so young an age!
@captaincal6447
@captaincal6447 3 года назад
@Jeremy Ethier
@tienthanh21697
@tienthanh21697 3 года назад
he's a kinesiologist so he knows this very well
@muameriljazagic922
@muameriljazagic922 3 года назад
This man is wrong. He is putting some scientifict researches as a proof so you would believe him.
@rafaelsanchez5853
@rafaelsanchez5853 3 года назад
4) He pronounces clearly
@Szystedt
@Szystedt 3 года назад
@@muameriljazagic922 Would you care to explain how he's wrong?
@Hersatz
@Hersatz 3 года назад
I stopped training about a year ago due to a too high expectation from myself towards my workout schedule which led to the whole process becoming a chore. I went back at it a month back with the mindset of doing it for fun and stopping the reps whenever I'm getting tired of it, if I can't get it near failure. Never have been happier training. It's not a chore anymore. It has become an enjoyable activity. And I'm still gaining mass and definition. Win-win!
@jellewierda3828
@jellewierda3828 3 года назад
For me sort of the same. Training to hard is not sustainable. So I stopt and started, stopt and started.... So not the gains I wanted. I started this week with the same mindset you described. Let's see!
@ulisesc4388
@ulisesc4388 3 года назад
@@jellewierda3828 results ?
@gustavpropovski9932
@gustavpropovski9932 3 года назад
@@jellewierda3828 results?
@marcellbeckford3955
@marcellbeckford3955 3 года назад
This is why some people stay the same size or it will take forever for you to get big stopping the weights when you get tired is just silly, you might not understand now but you will in a years time when you see the little progress
@Hersatz
@Hersatz 3 года назад
@@marcellbeckford3955 Well, of course mass and definition won't develop as much if the individual trains less. Unless the individual go really lazy at it, that person will still be fitter than if he or she did not train at all, that's for sure. You seem to place the emphasis on the wrong aspect of my message which was to be happy in ones workout routine so that he or she won't stop because of it becoming a weekly chore. People shouldnt expect to become beaffy by working out the way I mention it.
@laserbeam002
@laserbeam002 3 года назад
This makes more sense to me than anything else I have read or heard. Thank you for posting. I have been doing this for months simply because I just didn't enjoy pumping it to failure and I have still made good gains.
@haamatsuri
@haamatsuri 4 года назад
Harder than last time
@jdubdoubleu
@jdubdoubleu 4 года назад
You're not my coach!
@rdt970
@rdt970 4 года назад
easy day was yesterday
@NDakota79
@NDakota79 4 года назад
my doctor says the same
@tripaloski_6971
@tripaloski_6971 4 года назад
My doctor too, he's also a lot of other things
@firmanpanjiutama2579
@firmanpanjiutama2579 4 года назад
@@tripaloski_6971 My doctor says he's not a doctor 🤔
@everchangingcod3293
@everchangingcod3293 3 года назад
Just starting out and enjoying the hard work to put in. But you by far explained the easiest of anyone I watched. Thanks a ton!
@ricardofabia
@ricardofabia 2 года назад
Only now I found this video. At 45 this makes sense to me as my recovery is notably slower and I managed to increase the weight for my sets by consistently stopping short 1 or 2 reps to failure. Now I know the science behind it. Thank you!
@mcpartridgeboy
@mcpartridgeboy 5 месяцев назад
im 45 too and i lift every rep to failure, im in great shape and i feel like its vot a workout if i dont, but if i can coo it just a bit with the same results thats great.
@nesdenarias9824
@nesdenarias9824 4 года назад
9:09 Conclusion
@dynl9141
@dynl9141 4 года назад
U da real mvp
@adityashekhar1893
@adityashekhar1893 4 года назад
May you and your dear ones live long and prosper.
@pierrecohenmusic
@pierrecohenmusic 4 года назад
My man!
@Axelnegronperez
@Axelnegronperez 4 года назад
exactly like get to the point lol
@zlightningtv
@zlightningtv 4 года назад
It’s a 10 minute video..
@rhitamdutta1996
@rhitamdutta1996 4 года назад
Fun fact, Greg watched this video even before it was published.
@hamza77v
@hamza77v 4 года назад
Jeremy:stop few reps before failure Athlean X:Destroy youself and you did it
@adityasingh9512
@adityasingh9512 4 года назад
Sure many will like it! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-WAsFkh_XuUs.html
@itsmebd7422
@itsmebd7422 4 года назад
TRAIN HAAAARDERRRR HAAAARDERR How much harder? HARDEERRRRR ! That's the words in my mind every time I work out. Now I'm once again confused and don't know who to believe
@redsmoke6541
@redsmoke6541 4 года назад
Itsme BD you can do this and still train harder then last time
@al-islaam
@al-islaam 4 года назад
@@hamza77v Jeff Nippard says also that you need to stop a few reps before failure
@sudan47
@sudan47 4 года назад
My best fitness channel. Period.. I gained so much muscle consuming this channel. Thanks Jeremy. You Rock!!
@QuangNguyen-xj9bv
@QuangNguyen-xj9bv 4 года назад
After subscribing and watching Jeremy channel for a year, now I am proud to say that I have the best physique in my class at school (I am 18) thanks to science-based information. Thank you so so much Jeremy Ethier and I will definitely take a program on your website in the future ! Love it from Vietnam
@ahmadyamlikha9659
@ahmadyamlikha9659 4 года назад
I like to train to failure on the last set on most exercises, I feel like that's the best way that's been working for me
@pranjalprasad8910
@pranjalprasad8910 4 года назад
John meadows style 👌🏻
@harambey
@harambey 4 года назад
Failure every set for maximum GAINZZZZ fook these studies they change every 5 years
@pranjalprasad8910
@pranjalprasad8910 4 года назад
@@harambey soon a "study" will prove eat poop for gains 😂
@harambey
@harambey 4 года назад
@@pranjalprasad8910 lol
@EgoLifter8011
@EgoLifter8011 4 года назад
@@harambey last vid he said we need to do 30+reps for this quarantine home workout
@DisciplineDave
@DisciplineDave 4 года назад
You da man Jeremy thank you for focusing on technique because that is the reason I model my channel that way. One day I will be as big as you.
@ryanlacy554
@ryanlacy554 2 года назад
This the best explained video I’ve seen on the subject! Have always trained to failure but gonna switch it up and leave a few in the tank
@jimmy5634
@jimmy5634 3 года назад
This is great advice. The other half of this is time between workouts. That varies with everyone. Age is a significant factor. Generally, the older you are and the more intensely you train, the more rest you need for your muscles to recover. The best results I have gotten have been when I give a given muscle group sufficient recovery time.
@mansebas
@mansebas 4 года назад
I am from Chile and I am in my last year of pedagogy in physical education. I appreciate the good information you give us, plus I practice my English. regards!
@whatever_it_takes6691
@whatever_it_takes6691 4 года назад
Which would be the best place for an American to retire? Argentina, Uruguay or Chile?
@nmills87
@nmills87 4 года назад
These videos are awesome Jeremy thank you. Very calmly delivered. Science backed. Keep it up! 💪🏻👏🏻
@marksefton4786
@marksefton4786 2 года назад
Hi Jeremy, I just want to say after watching just a few of your videos you have give me the knowledge and confidence to train hard and well since i have subscribed to your channel I have signed up to the gym and just finished my second week of training ( upper body, lower body, rest, upper, lower, rest rest & repeat , just wanna say thank you and look forward to watching more of your content.
@zackt.7727
@zackt.7727 4 года назад
Greg Doucette bout to have a field day with this one
@Noonesbusiness
@Noonesbusiness 4 года назад
He did and it was spectacular
@ardgeighw5174
@ardgeighw5174 4 года назад
in Doucette's video at 7:36 in he admits he takes testosterone supplementation. So if you're natty, listen to Jeremy. If you're a cheater, listen to Greg.
@thestuff4321
@thestuff4321 3 года назад
@@ardgeighw5174 Cheater? What's he cheating at?
@jbkx6296
@jbkx6296 3 года назад
@@ardgeighw5174 thats how you show people what an idiot you are! Congrats
@farhanriazfitness9491
@farhanriazfitness9491 4 года назад
Awesome videos man, keep up the helpful Quarantine content🔥💪
@richarda.piedrahita617
@richarda.piedrahita617 4 года назад
I was just wondering if I train hard enough and you came out with this video at the perfect time. Thanks man! Keep with the content 🙏
@epiram
@epiram 2 года назад
so has the video helped
@DrGeta666
@DrGeta666 3 года назад
These videos are amazing. Showing resource papers is key yet summarised in an entertaining and insightful way. Fantastic.
@jamierobinson2707
@jamierobinson2707 3 года назад
Every video Jeremy puts out is beneficial. I love it.
@logwind
@logwind 4 года назад
Best fitness channel on RU-vid. No nonsense. And no FAKE WEIGHTS.
@theCreativeAssemblymachinimas
@theCreativeAssemblymachinimas 3 года назад
I have always thought that pushing myself to failure was the only thing to do. This video opened me a new view on workout and training. Thanks a lot! I am increasing every day my knowledge just watching RU-vid videos for free
@bismuth7730
@bismuth7730 Год назад
After two years can you tell us your experience? Did you notice improvement once you stopped going to failure? tnx
@theCreativeAssemblymachinimas
@@bismuth7730 i still need to go to failure or almost, it is a habit i think, i am scared to go too low out of the 2 rep buffer if i do not go to failure
@xDeathAngeLTRx
@xDeathAngeLTRx Год назад
@@theCreativeAssemblymachinimas same if u dont go to failure you never know what the real rir was
@boots7859
@boots7859 Год назад
Thats because it made sense w/o science, and even when science came onto the scene, it seemed to support that methodology. As always, with further Basic Research, what seems common sense actually isn't. All I know is I preferentially want to believe the newest science explained here because it does make working out easier physically and mentally which can only improve my desire to maintain the effort.
@MUSCLE_EMOTION
@MUSCLE_EMOTION 4 года назад
Very nice. 💪
@ahmedqh3378
@ahmedqh3378 3 года назад
Yahh
@AK-sw1nj
@AK-sw1nj 2 года назад
Thanks
@jdubdoubleu
@jdubdoubleu 4 года назад
Over the years Jeremys videos have massively improved. Love it!
@jxhnny_gxddamn
@jxhnny_gxddamn 4 года назад
The problem is that most ppl don’t know how many reps they still got in the tank
@luqmanhbs3885
@luqmanhbs3885 4 года назад
Then that's a problem with the application, not the science. Most beginners don't inherently know how or unable to do a bench press or dumbbell press, with the typical culprit being weakness of stabilisers. Do we then completely remove the bench press and replace it with the Smith Machine or do we get them to continuously work on it? Same concept here. Get the athlete to recognise how an RPE or RIR feels like with smart programming. The mantra, harder than last time is also tiny bit misleading. To a beginner athlete, a Linear Progression like SS, doing a 3x5 squat with 0 RIR will still allow them to recover enough to do the same with 2.5kg more next session. Same can't be said for an intermediate athlete. An intermediate might be better off doing Texas Method for example, where the first day is volume day where they leave some reps in reserve, then second day is recovery day where they leave ALOT in reserve, and last day being Intensity day where you leave nothing in reserve. With the new PR or training max, they then recalculate their volume work and repeat the week with adjusted weights, typically higher than last week. From session 1 to session 2, did the athlete train harder than last time? No. From week 1 to week 2, did he? Yes. Sure, what I said is much more complicated than just giving your best each training. But it is necessary for anyone who isn't an intermediate. Even if you look at the highest level of athlete, they also do their training in specific blocks, with intention to minimise fatigue and peak them for competition.
@birukbirhanu3929
@birukbirhanu3929 3 года назад
thank you man...its not like we can see a red graph when ever we lift
@Marco-jx9rr
@Marco-jx9rr 3 года назад
True. Expecially when doing pull ups or other fullbody recruiting movements, very taxing on the nervous system. If say you slept less it can bring to significantly lower resilience.
@legshakermaker1968
@legshakermaker1968 3 года назад
Watch the whole video; this is addressed.
@SuperABOALAA
@SuperABOALAA 3 года назад
You can sense it
@zachyoung6756
@zachyoung6756 3 года назад
Jeremey, this is such a high quality presentation. Your references to the scientific papers and animations/illustrations are very helpful. I’m just impressed with the production value. You’re sure to grow this channel. Thank you
@drake9591
@drake9591 4 года назад
I love your dedication to fitness, and willingness to share. You got me lookin like a model in my own home 🤘🏾😁
@casper7221
@casper7221 4 года назад
This is really valuable info to me. I just got serious about the gym/eating right, and the soreness from taking every exercise to failure didn’t feel natural or healthy while recovering. Will for sure implement this into my workout.
@sessario982
@sessario982 3 года назад
That 10, 8, 6 hits too close to home, thanks for the info though, was about to apply push-till-failure, thank goodness i saw this first. New sub bro🔥
@MichaelMHD
@MichaelMHD 3 года назад
90% of my knowledge of bodybuilding is because of u. Thank u soo soo sooo much Jeremy. i fixed my hunch back a lot of mistakes of doing workout and lots of things more importantly my belly fat 3 month I'm in the process and trying to lose more, thanks to ur guides...
@re_i_gn
@re_i_gn 3 года назад
This is exactly the type of video I need just as I'm starting to take my fitness journey seriously. Immediately subbed!
@ericcorona2817
@ericcorona2817 Год назад
How are you doing after a year? Do you stay disciplined?
@alann5003
@alann5003 Год назад
I think doing as many reps you can with perfect form and pace is a good rule.
@immortal4471
@immortal4471 Год назад
yeah I agree this guy doesn't even have a lot of muscle mass so its hard to take him seriously.
@eyi768
@eyi768 Год назад
@@immortal4471 Maybe he doesn’t want to look like a body builder? His physique shouldn’t take away if he’s providing facts. Not if he looks like some twig.
@Nanomachines5on
@Nanomachines5on Год назад
I'm mixed on this as well. It's really hard to judge rep to failure. Also, the slower you perform the motion under strain, the more FORCE your muscle generates. The amount of force more closely correlates to the amount of muscle damage which is ultimately what produces growth. And then form is the other end of this equation. If you're getting sloppy before you get to failure with a particular exercise, you're not even seeing benefit in the muscles you're actually trying to target.
@Hooli31
@Hooli31 Год назад
As he said, most ppl fall short couple reps when predicting failure, so it s perfect, because one shouldnt go to failure anyway.
@ak3d2y97
@ak3d2y97 Год назад
But when should i up the weights, I can't always just train with 10kg dumbbells for maximum. Is there a maximum rep range even for failure like, if you go to failure after 20 reps then you must up the weights kinda thing?
@aymardnguimfack8548
@aymardnguimfack8548 3 года назад
I love the fact that you always use research papers in the videos. It reassures us that you are well instructed and that the information is legit.
@burningxmage2820
@burningxmage2820 4 года назад
Like how the whole comment section is about dr Greg
@levioptionallastname6749
@levioptionallastname6749 2 года назад
I am so glad this video is direct. The other ones on youtube are full of nonsense. thank you for not making this full of filler.
@soowie4599
@soowie4599 3 года назад
Nice work! Filling in the gaps people are unsure of and debunking the trends!
@danleigh6767
@danleigh6767 4 года назад
Greg Doucette is gonna lose it after seeing that thumbnail
@utkarsh5138
@utkarsh5138 4 года назад
Haha true
@cianqf1161
@cianqf1161 4 года назад
and greg actually likes Jeremy
@hamzabenchaita4000
@hamzabenchaita4000 4 года назад
HARDER THAN LAST TIME
@williamperez2195
@williamperez2195 4 года назад
Honestly i think jeremy made this video as a response to greg 😂
@gloks3334
@gloks3334 4 года назад
@@williamperez2195 yup, done on purpose
@michaelcroteau5919
@michaelcroteau5919 4 года назад
I find this true for myself, I’ve tried both methods. I can hold form better and over a period of months I find myself less fatigued and better motivated to continue lifting. Working to failure every time is taxing physically and mentally. It’s a grind. And I know what Greg says. It just doesn’t work for me!
@bsiferd
@bsiferd 2 года назад
Jeremy you have the best most valuable RU-vid channel on strength training I've ever found
@ibexdnb2879
@ibexdnb2879 3 года назад
Jeremy i think you are the best RU-vid fitness coach. I like that you introduce scientific papers into your studies and i also like your realness. I can see you are not putting on a show. Thanks mate. Love from England. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@terran6471
@terran6471 2 года назад
🤔🤔🤔 A lot of people have been guilty of going to failure. As someone who does split training, I've done the not going to failure type of workouts and it works. It also allows you to hit the same muscle groups twice a week. This man isn't just saying something just to be heard. This actually works ❗️❗️❗️
@d-rockanomaly9243
@d-rockanomaly9243 3 года назад
I did a SINGLE, PERFECT chin up and became shredded in a single instant.
@haimkeissy
@haimkeissy 3 года назад
I drank a trooper beer and Odin made me shredded on the spot
@mikec6935
@mikec6935 3 года назад
thats not posible stop lying 🙄
@JoyBoy782
@JoyBoy782 3 года назад
@@mikec6935 Its a joke
@abdulbah2176
@abdulbah2176 3 года назад
Show me your ways
@MajorTrubble
@MajorTrubble 4 месяца назад
Love your videos , very detailed and simple to understand .
@Arnauuumm98
@Arnauuumm98 Год назад
This video is gold, ty man!
@FitLabb
@FitLabb 4 года назад
Long story short, volume training at a lower to moderate weight for higher reps & sets at a slower pace increasing time under tension is the best recipe for maximum hypertrophy (not factoring in other things such as nutrition, sleep, allowing for time for proper muscle recovery between workouts, etc.....)
@ifollowjesus1667
@ifollowjesus1667 2 года назад
What?
@akemdam9824
@akemdam9824 2 года назад
@@ifollowjesus1667 sleep ,eat well and do more reps intead of heavier lifts.
@pratik5065
@pratik5065 Год назад
@@akemdam9824 And keep the tension
@Ty-oe4dr
@Ty-oe4dr Год назад
and good rom
@rhinogaming919
@rhinogaming919 Год назад
Does 15 reps count as high rep? Im talking about bicep curls here
@meatler5191
@meatler5191 4 года назад
today i was doing push ups to failure and my body is so numb and weak this video will help me alot thx :D
@MetroVOfficiall
@MetroVOfficiall 3 года назад
Thank you so much for this one, really learned a lot now one of the best videos I saw this year
@bitflux2
@bitflux2 Год назад
Bro thanks your vids, def the best fitness youtuber 👍🏻
@mohamedmehdi4151
@mohamedmehdi4151 4 года назад
I learned so much from this channel i don't even need to do my researches no more
@basmdh
@basmdh 4 года назад
No
@skullcrusher76gaming
@skullcrusher76gaming 4 года назад
I learned so much I can grow without working out now
@DeathTeamSolo
@DeathTeamSolo 4 года назад
You should 100% still do your own research
@hexotics6640
@hexotics6640 4 года назад
Then you shall never look your full potential mate.
@mohamedmehdi4151
@mohamedmehdi4151 4 года назад
@@andreapagano7967 It a jk ..
@harryli5979
@harryli5979 4 года назад
Just train close to failure on compound movements and go past failure on some sets of isolation exercises
@sulaimanaljabari
@sulaimanaljabari 4 года назад
Another great video man!
@SwasthyaNeer
@SwasthyaNeer 2 года назад
Amazing stuff as always 👍 💪
@BC-hv7fn
@BC-hv7fn 4 года назад
Been training lower reps and NOT to failure for years. It works. I leave my body with room to survive and not be torn to pieces
@luqmanhbs3885
@luqmanhbs3885 4 года назад
I used to be the bros who misunderstood progressive overload and was like the gym bros who go, " train harderrrrr". It worked pretty well at the start when running Starting Strength. Do my max 3x5, next session, add 2.5kg to 5kg. Harder than last time. That progression lasted quite abit, then I hit the wall. So followed ss, deloaded by 10%, reworked up, got some more gains, then hit the wall again, deloaded, reworked up. At one point, added more sets, going up to 7x5, but that just made everything worse. Body got banged up quite badly and wasn't making so much gain. So went online and realised I was training like a moron, because I misunderstood that "last time" isn't defined well. As a beginner, "last time" could mean the previous session. As an intermediate, "last time" could be a week or 2 weeks. To an advanced lifter, have no idea how long of a training block a "last time" is. Switched to Texas Method. On Texas Method, day 2 is a recovery day. Lots of RIR. RPE might be a 1 or 2. Definitely wasn't harder than last time, if we define "last time" as my previous session. Greg would call it training like a pussy. But I think I was training smart. Because that session allowed me to keep currency while keeping fatigue low, also allowing me to get the PR on day 3. When we then define "last time" as a mini training block for the week, then sure, I was training harder than last time. But no one here tells you that. They just chant their mantra. h
@robinkalk9463
@robinkalk9463 4 года назад
Another Great video. Thanks So much for all the info bro!
@lucapizzingrilli8625
@lucapizzingrilli8625 4 года назад
Such a great video. Thank you so much for posting great quality information :)
@steelmongoose4956
@steelmongoose4956 4 года назад
I was the hardest worker in the gym, until I realized that I was training like a young man on steroids. Now I train like a smart older guy. Turns out that some moderation and recovery works.
@d.torres4965
@d.torres4965 4 года назад
Steel Mongoose working harder is actually better than working smarter in my opinion. It isn’t physically advantageous but it makes you much stronger mentally and then you end up with a non stop machine mentality
@qx-jd9mh
@qx-jd9mh 4 года назад
@@d.torres4965 They're not mutually exclusive.
@gregdoucette
@gregdoucette 4 года назад
Are you suggesting that a young man on steroids trains harder than me doubt it
@uno1industries
@uno1industries 4 года назад
Greg Doucette The doctor has spoken.
@d.torres4965
@d.torres4965 4 года назад
Greg Doucette why are you not verified? You should have a check mark next to your channel username
@LegionZGaming
@LegionZGaming 3 года назад
this is a new information for the gym community, because they used to focus on failure
@stuartgreywolftomlinson8923
@stuartgreywolftomlinson8923 4 года назад
Also, thank you for your videos, from watching them and following your advice I have been making gains in both size and strength. Great videos, Thank you.
@DarioVidili
@DarioVidili Год назад
Great video, thanks for the info!
@NoorMohammed-me9lg
@NoorMohammed-me9lg 4 года назад
I always used to to do reps until failure. What you said is true. It requires huge amount of motivation. I spent atleast 20 minutes each time just get enough motivation for the workout to get started lol😂🤦. And the muscles sometimes take more than 3 days to fully heal. This video is gonna change a lot of things for me ):
@allenadams1862
@allenadams1862 4 года назад
I've found that by the time I recover from a extended hard workout I'm back in the same place when I start my next work out
@greggerx
@greggerx 4 года назад
Fantastic video, Jeremy, as always. Very informative.
@gerardvdpl4409
@gerardvdpl4409 3 года назад
This is extremely informative, thanks loads. Looking forward to get back at it.
@fitez7205
@fitez7205 4 года назад
Jeremy has the best looking channel in terms of content, editing, and Just the way he puts out his knowledge! You're a true inspiration and a role model for me Inspired by you I even started my own Channel 🙌🙌🙌
@uncledrew2430
@uncledrew2430 4 года назад
I don’t normally do this but you’ve got some clean thumbnails and didn’t even self promote yourself. I’m gonna check out one of your vids. Respect💪
@nickbyrd1027
@nickbyrd1027 4 года назад
Jeremy definitely has super clean editing and videos, I would say Jeff Nippard also has incredible editing and video quality.
@eriktedja1199
@eriktedja1199 4 года назад
HARDERRR
@fitez7205
@fitez7205 4 года назад
@@uncledrew2430 thank you so much Appreciate it 💯🙂
@newlife45692
@newlife45692 4 года назад
Coach Greg got me listening to this guy who know hes facts
@alex.muntean
@alex.muntean 3 года назад
Thanks for making this video!
@jennifertrezona8480
@jennifertrezona8480 4 года назад
Thanks Jeremy, always good info 🤘💪
@grahamblack1961
@grahamblack1961 Год назад
This is really interesting, it's like a mantra for some guys - lift to failure, lift to failure. It's judging it that's difficult so you are just 3 reps short.
@mdd1963
@mdd1963 Год назад
20 years ago ( at age 39), I noticed strength gains increases if I had at *least* 3 and sometimes 4 days off between bench/ shoulder day. Now, at age 59, it seems 6 and sometimes 7 days is better.
@boots7859
@boots7859 Год назад
Everyone's psyiology is different obviously, however that seems a little long. But if it works for you, then you would probably be a prime candidate for the method shown here. I'm in the same age bracket, and definately have seen good results from using a method similar to this so far. I like going to the gym 3 days a week with a 48h+ recovery over the weekend. Much easier to stay motivated, would do as shown here even if the gains were/are somewhat less than the theoretical equal shown here.
@YashvardhanVerma
@YashvardhanVerma 3 года назад
Great video! This information is pretty useful to me because I've been plateauing even while pushing for failure
@pematenzin9063
@pematenzin9063 4 года назад
This makes so much sense I hope I can recover from all the pinches I have experienced from over pushing my body Thanks for the info
@mauroscimone8584
@mauroscimone8584 3 года назад
Great great video and explanation! Thank you!! I can say for my experience that the first 1-2 series of an exercise often are more difficult that the other 1-2 after that, probably because the brain and the muscles need a little warm up before going all out of optimal performance.
@hawaiidispenser
@hawaiidispenser 4 года назад
In these studies, is EVERY set taken to failure? Because I've never once heard that recommended in all the body building material I've seen. Instead, it's usually just the last set taken to failure (or just the last set of the whole workout). I bet that would be easier to recover from and would not weaken you for additional sets.
@boots7859
@boots7859 Год назад
Subbed on this video alone. Nice to see more science confirming my POV, which does make for an easier workout and far less post-w/o pain in recovery phase. One thing would be to insure you have 1 recovery phase that last 2 days, like the weekend. That way, you can if you want push to failure or very close to it on Friday and have that extra recovery time. I'm 50+, and just getting back into the gym, and my main concern has been ligament and tendon strengthening, prior to more formal/serious w/o. Spent the last month and a half doing sets of 100, 50 rep with low weight, though no scientific evidence its more than in my mind.
@LuanO7
@LuanO7 4 года назад
Your content is great! Keep up the great work! Insightful!
@stupid13375p34k3r
@stupid13375p34k3r 2 года назад
That study where they split the variable between legs is genius. No need to worry about variables like genetics, stress, diet, etc. It’s all in the same person and the only difference is the workout and small effects from leg dominance.
@RT-me3wn
@RT-me3wn 2 года назад
This makes perfect sense to me. When I play hockey, if I get stuck out for a long shift my legs and lungs have a hard time recovering to be at their peak for the remainder of the game, but when I'm able to keep my shifts short, my legs and lungs stay strong and without fatigue throughout the entire game. I imagine it like you have a stack of 10 cards and your buddy gives you another card every 5 seconds. Well, if you're throwing out a card every five seconds, you're staying even because your buddy is replacing that card. But, if you're throwing out a card every two seconds, then you're depleting your card stack and will run low or even out. Same thing with the workout. Your body is replenishing everything it takes for you to do the movements of your workout, but it can only replenish you so fast and so much. If you push yourself beyond what your body can replenish in a short amount of time, then you're going to burn out and gain less overall benefit.
@igorkhomenko2508
@igorkhomenko2508 4 года назад
This is awesome news! Very high quality of content and superior presentation.
@algarnersr.
@algarnersr. 4 года назад
Great video! Good knowledge, Thanks
@rudrapratapsingh1050
@rudrapratapsingh1050 4 года назад
Bro could you please make a workout for a 14 or 15 year old. And also the diet and please include all the situations like skinny or fat or both. Keep up this work bro.💪💪👍🔥🔥
@lablusa
@lablusa 4 года назад
What I love bout this, is the fact that Greg Doucette is gonna spit harder in the next vid for us :)
@PapunaOfficial
@PapunaOfficial 4 года назад
he did
@circleofattention6021
@circleofattention6021 Год назад
Man your channel is so good ❤
@Daniel-ox1sb
@Daniel-ox1sb 3 года назад
You make the best fitness videos. The science is legit and you show the evidence, unlike many others.
@ceh885
@ceh885 3 года назад
can you do a video for complete beginners on how to actually train in a gym as a summary? Like a dummies guide to the gym? ^^
@sycofya1677
@sycofya1677 4 года назад
3:17 is exactly where im at with my body.
@channakazawa1693
@channakazawa1693 4 года назад
Thanks for the tips, Jeremy!
@piotr5398
@piotr5398 2 года назад
Well explained Jeremy, thanks a lot for this material!
@brolyui4484
@brolyui4484 4 года назад
0:11 i thought the leg was gonna snap😲🤤😨😱
@artistamisto
@artistamisto 3 года назад
I always incorporate the train to failure method in my workouts but mainly for isolation exercises like biceps, triceps, and side delts. Mostly though it's on the last set. That set I go to failure and for arms 1 or 2 forced reps helping out with other hand. For side delts I always go one side at a time for stricter form and the 4th or 5th set lighter to failure. Positive results with size and strength increases.
@silverbullet1979
@silverbullet1979 Год назад
This is so helpful, thank U so much for this... 👍🏼
@halivudestevez2
@halivudestevez2 Год назад
I will keep in mind this. Thank you!
@oddballl9128
@oddballl9128 3 года назад
I'm just a newbie, but I figure it's smart to rep to technical faliure, meaning if I can't hold good form then the set should end. I also do a lot of dropsets so I can stay in same 10 rep range by the 3rd set without being totally wrecked.
@mitchbutler4736
@mitchbutler4736 4 года назад
This is so true, I used to train to absolute failure every single workout and after about 3-4 months of that I felt like complete shit, always hungry always tired it was so hard to stay motivated
@tytusbombus4110
@tytusbombus4110 4 года назад
i was doing that since forever XD but after i started doing it twice per week for each muscle group and on caloric deficit, it actually started to impact me. looks like a week of rest on failure is actually ok.
@Cloppa2000
@Cloppa2000 3 года назад
If this is true then it is absolute gold! I've always over-trained both weights and cardio.. and even boxing and Tkd pushing myself to my limits every single workout. Results have been reasonable but not as good as they should have been for the effort I put in. I've just learnt to take it easier on the cardio and Tkd and boxing and am seeing a difference.. Now I need to apply this to weights!
@flight879
@flight879 3 года назад
I started hitting the gym like 2 months and I really needed this video thx man!
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